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Negotiating the Future: What Public Employee Unions must do to survive in the 21 st Century Open Classroom “Policy Advice to the Governor” Barry Bluestone Dean, School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs. September 22, 2010. The Glory Days of the UAW. 1960s: UAW had 1.5 million members
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Negotiating the Future:What Public Employee Unions mustdo to survive in the 21st CenturyOpen Classroom“Policy Advice to the Governor”Barry BluestoneDean, School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs September 22, 2010
The Glory Days of the UAW • 1960s: UAW had 1.5 million members • Its economic clout helped provide excellent wages and benefits • Equally important, the UAW was one the most respected progressive forces in the nation fighting for universal health care, civil rights, workforce training, and fighting against poverty • Its political clout helped boost the national minimum wage, legislation not directly benefiting it own well-paid members • Because of its progressive stance, it enjoyed widespread popular support
Traditional Workplace Contract … first negotiated by UAW with GM in 1946 • AIF/COLA Wage Formula • “Fringe” Benefits • Seniority Protection • Grievance Machinery • Work Rules/Job Classifications • Union Security Clause • Management Rights Clause
Traditional Contract Worked Wonders in the Post-War Period • AIF-COLA Wage Formula provided massive dose of consumer demand • Fringe Benefits provided great security • Seniority, grievance machinery, work rules, union shop did the same -- gave sense of security as well • And so, American workers went out and spent their incomes generating record GDP growth rates … and a full generation of prosperity ensued
Today …. • The UAW has fewer than 355,000 members • Its economic and political clout is a shadow of what it once was • Much of its decline is due to the extraordinary blunders made by management • Nevertheless, the union was partly to blame
Failures of the UAW • It failed to press the auto companies to build high quality, innovative vehicles that could compete with imports • Often it insisted on work rules that undermined efficiency and compromised the industry’s competitiveness • It did not listen to its customers … those who buy cars, trucks, and vans • Toyota, Honda, Nissan came to dominate the industry … and the domestic industry went into decline and then bankruptcy
Until quite recently, the UAW looked like it was doing fine • The explosion in competition began as a trickle, but it was generally ignored • The industry and the union were so arrogant that both felt their privileged status would last forever • They sure were wrong!
The Union Movement Today • The UAW was hardly alone • Today, less than 14% of U.S. workers are union members, down from 35% … and only 7.2% in the private sector • With the union movement’s membership so low, private unions have lost much of their power to protect their own members … and the nation is losing a major force for progressive change
1955: 35% 2008: 13.7%
Could the same thing happen to Public Sector Unions? What is the future of the NEA?
It looks like Public Sector Unions are doing fine
But troubling signs ahead • State and local governments facing massive fiscal deficits • Many parents, particularly in city schools, feel their kids are not getting the education they need • Progressives and Democratic lawmakers, not reactionaries, are now in the forefront of the charter school movement … to free school systems from the unions they see as barriers to school reform
Massive State Deficits in 2009 % of Budget
Current deficits are only the tip of the iceberg in Many States • The cost of state government services is spiraling out of control • Given the rising cost of debt service, public employee pensions, and Medicaid, states are facing a massive long-term “Structural Deficit” that will destroy public services
Price of State & Local Services rising twice as fast as overall prices
Debt Service, Public Pensions, and Medicaid will devour most of the Mass State Budget
New Collective Bargaining Environment • Municipal officials have no choice but to demand relief from public service workers or cities and towns will go bankrupt • As the public begins to recognize how well public sector workers are doing relative to other workers, and how bad the national and state economies are doing, they will increasingly side with municipal officials and against public sector unions • Some may cheer the demise of public sector unions, but many former supporters will sit on the sidelines and not come to their rescue
This poses a serious challenge for public employee unions • How will state and local governments survive the structural crisis without taking on their unions? • Can state and local governments continue to fund public services offered by union workers? • Will taxpayers be willing to continue to support public services even if this means more taxes?
How Do We Solve the Structural Deficit? • Reform inefficient government bureaucracies and government programs • Public sector union reforms • Work rules and job classifications • Pension & medical insurance reform • Raise more tax revenue • Sales tax, gasoline tax, income tax • Regionalize public services
Lessons for Public Sector Unions • Public sector unions must help find ways to improve productivity and reduce the costs of public services • Public sector unions must make a better case to consumers … those who pay the taxes for services … and this requires union editors who can tell the story persuasively to the public (and their own members) • Unions must see taxpayers as a potential ally and work to gain their trust • It is time for a “grand new bargain” where unions play a greater role in improving service, quality, and innovation in return for greater job security and public respect
Aspects of the New Grand Bargain • Union joins in efforts to boost … • Productivity/Efficiency • Quality of Services • Innovation in Offering Services • Union to be a partner in serving the needs of the taxpayer • Union plays a serious role in helping shape social policy … balancing the interests of their members with the interests of the public … and explaining this to both their members and the pubic
A New Grand Bargain: Rebuilding Public Support for State and Local Government • Reform outmoded Work Rules and Job Classifications • Public Sector Pension Reform • Advocate for Regionalism • Advocate for Efficient & Effective Government Services • Advocate for School Reform • Keep public services public • Support for adequate taxes to support excellent public services
“Enterprise Compact” • Joint Productivity Targets • AIF/COLA for Basic Pay & Benefits • Joint Quality Standards • Gain-sharing for meeting joint effectiveness and quality standards • JOINT ACTION between union and public sector management to continuously improve service
Illinois Priority One • “To effect excellence and equity in public education” • “Accountability (appropriate accountability) is important” • “Money is helpful when spent properly” • “Schools are engines of change in communities” • “Success is common, but not widely distributed”
Teacher Quality • Teacher preparation programs should be responsive to the needs of the field • Mentoring needs to be supported • Improved evaluation is essential • Professional development must be better focused and more effective • Teacher success should be rewarded • Teacher failure should have consequences
IEA Goals • “Our goal must be that every public school in Illinois is one that parents want their children to attend.” • Our students should “graduate from high school ready for college and/or the workforce”
IEA Strategies • Pre-school for All • Mandatory full-day kindergarten • Extended learning time • Reduced class size • Professional development • Parent and community engagement • Multigenerational learning models • Dropout recovery
Prospects for a New Union Future • Unions become part of the solution, not part of the problem • In response, Unions find greater popular support for the union agenda • Union political clout regained • American democracy reaches a new level
The Challenge • Public Employee Unions now have the chance to lead state and local government in reforms that will rebuild public trust and support for public services • We need to build that Grand New Bargain for the nation, for our communities, for our families, and for our children